Love4Boobies wrote:Websites with user-generated content will need to find a way to supervise their content better.
This is not really a possibility. Youtube can only do what it does because of Google's massive server farms. Do you expect fan forums to check every post for infringing links before it becomes visible? Is that even logical?
Love4Boobies wrote:Anyway, I feel like people are making a huge deal out of nothing---how often do you think authors will complain about their work illegally being linked to from forums, etc.? Heck, even today they can take legal action against websites like RapidShare but they don't.
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I think they will [be held responsible] because people having to suffer because of misjudgement will sue.
That's completely wrong, and this is exactly my point. People (esp. big media corporations)
do take legal action through the DMCA already. The difference is that the DMCA is not a giant hammer that takes down the whole site just for a single link, it is simply a request that the infringing content be removed. In addition, it gives the site owners safe harbor so that they are not responsible for someone else posting infringing content.
However, the DMCA is misused already. Helpful (to the giant corporations) ISPs and web hosts take down web sites when there really is no infringement, because they don't want to get involved in a legal battle. Notice
this is already going on. Taking away safe harbor from site owners and massively increasing the power of copyright owners and the government is NOT going to help.
Even if SOPA were perfectly fair and balanced, impossible to abuse, and not just a tool for media corporations to preserve their business models, why on earth would it be a good idea for the government to have DNS blacklisting powers? They have already shown themselves to be untrustworthy a thousand times over with the PATRIOT Act and NDAA.